
Pressures on natural resources - 5
Fire is part of the Australian environment and necessary for the continuing survival of some ecological communities. However it needs to be managed to protect human life and property.
Fire management must take a whole-of-landscape approach. While too frequent burning can cause irreversible changes, the effect of bushfires tends to be temporary:
- some native vegetation is adapted to fire and much of it is dependent on fire for reproduction
- biodiversity can recover to a certain extent (e.g. from seed beds that are not totally depleted) although some species may not recover at all
- water quality adversely affected by fire recovers gradually as riparian and hill slope vegetation recovers
- run-off from burnt slopes is initially higher and then declines as burnt vegetation re-grows.
Challenge: To ensure a whole-of-landscape management of fire hazard so that the long-term effects of bushfires are minimised.

Photo Urban Services

Photo Micheal Schultz


